Great pic at Highfield road - was it you ? (2 Viewers)

Calista

Well-Known Member
240 old pence to the pound...
Yep so a new penny is 2.4 old pennies, and 2.5 new ones is 6 old ones! I was there when all this new fangled metric stuff happened, as well as being at the incredible Wolves game.

Anyway, it didn't cost much to get in ...
 

steve cooper

Well-Known Member
That's very plausible, because it would be rare for photos to be taken outside the ground like that, and even rarer (in my experience) for people to be climbing over walls. The enormity of that game would explain both.

Edit: 1967 I believe. I'm in nit-picking mode this afternoon ;)
Yes, April 1967
 

Kneeza

Well-Known Member
Yep so a new penny is 2.4 old pennies, and 2.5 new ones is 6 old ones! I was there when all this new fangled metric stuff happened, as well as being at the incredible Wolves game.

Anyway, it didn't cost much to get in ...
Yeah. Pedantry is very unbecoming 😉
Leaving school in 1970 dropped me right in it too, but the good thing is, like you I guess, I can think simultaneously in £sd and £p, and also metric/Imperial.
More useful than it sounds.
 

Brylowes

Well-Known Member
All this talk of £s shillings & pence, old pennies new pennies, tuppence ha’penny etc
can we please talk the numerical language we all understand 🤔 how many handbags for Joy.
 

The Philosopher

Well-Known Member
Worked those turnstiles as a steward in 80s. Number of people who climbed over stiles or tried to bribe way in was unbelievable. Bunch of tight gits us cov fans..... but then again I got paid to watch the City !!!
Makes you wonder what the “real” attendances were back then.

A fair few knocked off by turnstile guys putting a few £ in their pocket. A few “squeezes” where two got in for one, a few over the fence, under the gate…

And then, by the time the money got to the counting office, how much was skimmed off by the chairman to pay for player “bonuses” in reddies or indeed just into the chairman’s pocket?

Plus, the more people you declare, the more police etc. you have to pay for?

Where did the suitcases full of cash come from for the 80/90’s “bungs” - wasn’t drawn out if the bank was it!

Some of the photos from the old days where the stands were full were probably where the ground had huge numbers of actual people.

It’s the other way round now.
 

Malaka

Well-Known Member
The big gate by the West End turnstiles was where we used to go in late sixties, early seventies. The old boy there was slipped a few bob, the gate opened and in we went.
 

Grendel

Well-Known Member
Its
Great picture. Yes the crow’s nest would be high up in that corner. Stood up there for years, can still see it all in my mind’s eye.

Looks like it was 4/6d (four shillings and sixpence) for an adult, which is 22p so it was well worth climbing over the wall to avoid paying ;)
2/6d for kids = 12p.

I’m todays money it’s £15.56 so given it’s standing it’s not that dissimilar to now
 

Calista

Well-Known Member
I’m todays money it’s £15.56 so given it’s standing it’s not that dissimilar to now
Although I've given you a like, your amount seemed too high, and having looked it up I think 4/6d in 1967 would be £4.47 now?
And for that you got Bill Glazier, Gibbo, Dave Clements and Bobby Gould...

Edit: and a win nearly every time!
 

Grendel

Well-Known Member
Although I've given you a like, your amount seemed too high, and having looked it up I think 4/6d in 1967 would be £4.47 now?
And for that you got Bill Glazier, Gibbo, Dave Clements and Bobby Gould...

Edit: and a win nearly every time!

Someone said 67 pence

 

Calista

Well-Known Member
So if a ticket was 22p and is now (say) £22, the transfer fee of £90000 we got for Gould that year would be £9m? Or is that not how old money worked?
No, as explained above ticket which cost 4/6d in 1967 was 22.5p in the new currency, and that's less than £4.50 today after taking inflation into account. The £90,000 for Bobby Gould (1968) equates to about £1.75m now.
 

Calista

Well-Known Member
I remember starting work at GEC in the early 60's, from memory my pay was about £5 per week.
It looks like the average manual wage in 1968 was £22/week, but the average top-flight player got £59/week (equates to about £1140 today). I imagine going to Arsenal Bobby Gould got more than that, and would have been delighted with maybe four times the wages of the man in the street. Now a typical Premier League player gets literally 100 times the pay of the average person, and it's still not enough for some of them or their agents.

We used to sleep in one room, 26 of us. And half the floor was missing. We were all huddled in one corner, for fear of falling. Try and tell the young people of today that, and they won't believe you.
 

Houchens Head

Fairly well known member from Malvern
We used to sleep in one room, 26 of us. And half the floor was missing. We were all huddled in one corner, for fear of falling. Try and tell the young people of today that, and they won't believe you.
Luxury! Well, of course we had it tough! There were 39 of us living in a shoe box in the middle of t'road. We had a handful of hot gravel for breakfast and we had to pay the mill owner to allow us to work!
 

SkyblueDad

Well-Known Member
Hope you weren't the guy that would open one of the gates at 2:50 to let some of the Bell Green lads in, about 1989 time. Ended badly though when instead of letting about 8 in as planned another 50+ opportunists followed and the guy got sacked on the spot.
There were a few turnstiles where you could get in for a few bob to the turnstile operator clever thing was to use a different one each match as the old bill were on to it. Another one was to hang around the main stand and when the away coach turned up mingle in and walk in with the players worked all the time, even signed kids autograph books by the gates to look the part.
 

Johhny Blue

Well-Known Member
No. The original figure was 240 to a pound. If there's actually only 65 to a pound, they're heavier. Unless this Peroni's scrambling my grey matter.

Sent from my MAR-LX1A using Tapatalk
I stand corrected. My eyes must have read 240 but my old brain registered 24
 

Brylowes

Well-Known Member
Its


I’m todays money it’s £15.56 so given it’s standing it’s not that dissimilar to now
Good defensive effort there in the name of the last 44 years of neo-liberalism 🤔 epic fail obviously, but decent effort all the same.
 

Users who are viewing this thread

Top